The raw materials market is sending all the right signals for a lithium developer: spot prices have doubled from their 2025 trough, the global market is headed for a supply deficit by 2026, and China is about to throw open its futures exchange to foreign traders. Yet Vulcan Energy’s shares refuse to follow the script. At €1.88 after Friday’s 1.24% bounce, the stock is still down 27.89% year-to-date and sits just 6.27% above its 52-week low of €1.77, hit on 23 March. The 14-day RSI of 39.9 is flirting with oversold territory, but the 200-day moving average at €2.60 remains a distant 27.5% above the current price — a reminder that the long-term downtrend is intact.
That technical picture looks especially stubborn against the backdrop of a lithium market that is fundamentally rewiring itself. Analysts now expect the global lithium carbonate equivalent surplus of roughly 180,000 tonnes recorded in 2024 to flip into a deficit of between 15,000 and 25,000 tonnes as early as 2026. Spot prices for lithium carbonate have already responded, climbing to around $19,000 a tonne — double the depths seen in 2025. The squeeze is being driven by project delays across the industry and tighter export rules from major producers such as Chile. A recent report from the Afreximbank added a fresh wild card: AI data centres, with their insatiable electricity appetite, are emerging as a new demand source for stationary energy storage, which in turn consumes lithium.
China is simultaneously trying to assert more control over price discovery. The Guangzhou Futures Exchange confirmed on 5 July that it will open its lithium futures and options contracts to international investors. The yuan-denominated instruments will come with a 5% discount on dollar collateral, and the exchange has already seen heavy volume — 6.3 million contracts changed hands in May alone. For European developers like Vulcan Energy, greater foreign participation could mean higher price volatility but also new hedging tools. The move adds another layer to the sector’s evolving pricing dynamics, which also include the ongoing consolidation between European Lithium and Critical Metals Corp, due to close in September.
Some institutional money is already positioning for a turnaround. State Street Corporation disclosed on 2 July that it had crossed the 3% voting rights threshold, holding 14,564,888 Vulcan shares, or 3.04% of the total, as of 24 June. That accumulation stands in contrast to the broader market’s caution and suggests that at least one large investor sees value at current levels.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Vulcan Energy?
The real test, however, comes on 30 July, when Vulcan Energy is due to publish its next quarterly report. With no other company-specific events on the calendar until then, the market’s focus will narrow to the numbers on capital expenditure and construction progress at the geothermal and lithium facilities in Landau and Frankfurt-Höchst. This will be the first major update since the company formally locked in the Lionheart financing package, and investors are looking for evidence that the project is on schedule and within budget. A second-half report will follow about six weeks later, but for now the quarterly release is the only near-term catalyst capable of altering the stock’s trajectory.
On a purely technical basis, the shares remain on a knife’s edge. The 52-week low at €1.77 is a critical floor — a sustained break below it would open the way to new multi-year lows. A recovery toward the 50-day moving average of €2.16, on the other hand, would provide the first genuine relief signal. The BOTSI-Advisor downgraded its technical assessment of the stock on 3 July, underscoring the fragility.
For now, the fundamental pendulum is swinging in Vulcan Energy’s favour. Lithium prices are climbing, the supply-demand balance is tightening, and China is building a more transparent futures market. But until the 30 July report proves that the company itself can keep pace with those favourable trends, the stock is likely to remain stuck near the floor — waiting for confirmation that the narrative inside the boardroom matches the one unfolding in the wider lithium world.
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